Murder: No Apparent Motive (Full Crime Documentary)

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Before all of the technological convenience of surveillance, it was much easier to get away with murder. There was a "golden era" of serial killing that coincided with post-war bloodlust and paranoia and seems to have tapered off around the time when cell phones rolled out to the masses.
DNA science was either nonexistent or in its infancy, and your average human wasn't pinging nearby cell towers throughout the day. Capitalism's daily grind continued to shove desperate human beings into dark alleys and onto dirty streets and predators hunted them down one by one. They looked like normal, "friendly" men while the police were looking for monsters.
Directed by Imre Horvath, this rare documentary ("Murder: No Apparent Motive") explores the increase in serial killing and the proliferation of serial killers in post-war America, primarily focusing on notorious killers such as Henry Lee Lucas, Ed Kemper and Ted Bundy. The film itself even features an exclusive interview with Kemper and presents us with archival footage of Bundy throughout.
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CONTENT LICENSED FROM IMRE HORVÁTH TO REALWOMEN/REALSTORIES. SHOULD YOU HAVE ANY QUERIES OR QUESTIONS, PLEASE CONTACT US AT: mu@matanuziel.com
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Пікірлер: 865

  • @RealWomenRealStories
    @RealWomenRealStories Жыл бұрын

    DON'T FORGET TO SUBSCRIBE! → bit.ly/2CwckC3

  • @barbaralamson7450

    @barbaralamson7450

    Жыл бұрын

    With so many advertisements subscribing is not really an option.

  • @KimberlySays...

    @KimberlySays...

    Жыл бұрын

    What year was this doc aired originally?

  • @jesser73

    @jesser73

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@KimberlySays... 1984.

  • @KimberlySays...

    @KimberlySays...

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jesser73 thank you 🙂

  • @loretta_3843

    @loretta_3843

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jesser73 hearing them talk of the green river killer, Gary Ridgeway, and knowing how many years that he still had in anonymity is just awful. I remember feeling like he'd just never be found.

  • @heatherh.197
    @heatherh.197 Жыл бұрын

    I tell my children if a grown adult, especially a grown adult man, asks them to help him, run the other way. Grown people should not be asking children for their assistance

  • @mrgh1650

    @mrgh1650

    Жыл бұрын

    Wow! I told my son the same thing!!!!

  • @Gazman67

    @Gazman67

    Жыл бұрын

    Bundy was asking grown women for help, not children. I agree with your advice to your children but it is possible that the other 99.99% of men who might ask for help with something from a youngster are actually innocently asking for help.

  • @mazzalobo

    @mazzalobo

    Жыл бұрын

    I tell my boys the same. There is no need to ask a child. Find an adult to ask

  • @kyleyoung1156

    @kyleyoung1156

    Жыл бұрын

    There's always a Gary Jones (possible child sex offender out there to disagree

  • @EraldoPiccione

    @EraldoPiccione

    Жыл бұрын

    Right

  • @andreasplosky8516
    @andreasplosky8516 Жыл бұрын

    It is very stupid to state that serial killers have no motive. All of them have motive, but it is a horrifically inhumane internal motive.

  • @nobodysbaby5048

    @nobodysbaby5048

    Жыл бұрын

    Basic premise: Everybody has a reason for what they do. It might not make sense to you, but they have a reason.

  • @meredithisme3752

    @meredithisme3752

    Жыл бұрын

    They're just wired wrong and it can't be fixed

  • @nobodysbaby5048

    @nobodysbaby5048

    Жыл бұрын

    @@meredithisme3752 There are clinical psychopaths that lead normal & successful lives, according to societal norms. But there's something there that can easily go drastically off the rails. I wouldn't say wired wrong but certainly different.

  • @davidprice7162

    @davidprice7162

    Жыл бұрын

    No APPARENT motive. In like 98% of murders, it's a friend, jealous spouse, someone trying to get an insurance pay off, someone trying to rip someone off in a drug deal, or a rivel gang member. If some girl is found in a ditch, killed by a complete stranger, there's no APPARENT motive the police can use to id a suspect. When Joseph DeAngelo (the golden state killer) murdered Lyman and Charlene Smith, they arrested, charged one of Lyman Smith's buisness partner that he ripped off in a land deal, because almost ALWAYS, there's a clear motive for the killing.

  • @iamnoone705

    @iamnoone705

    Жыл бұрын

    I guess that's why they use the word 'apparent' in the title

  • @aureliaa.4710
    @aureliaa.4710 Жыл бұрын

    My own mother was being led away by Rodney Alcala at the beach before her companion intervened, interrupting him. Otherwise me or my siblings would not exist.

  • @nobodysbaby5048

    @nobodysbaby5048

    Жыл бұрын

    Wow. That's a story to share.

  • @QueenPochy

    @QueenPochy

    Ай бұрын

    She definitely had an angel looking out for her!

  • @TraceyMariexx
    @TraceyMariexx Жыл бұрын

    There's always a motive in a killers head. Understanding the exact motivation will never eradicate them, no matter what we learn from them.

  • @r.williamcomm7693

    @r.williamcomm7693

    Жыл бұрын

    Agree. IMHO the sexual revolution as portrayed through media set off something in some men that made them killers. They all appear to have derived pleasure from reading about their acts in newspapers. It’s sick.

  • @budderkupp1282

    @budderkupp1282

    Жыл бұрын

    The motive is often that the rape/murder turns them on & gets them off; it's as simple as that, no matter how complex they try to make it out to be.

  • @Pluto_Is_A_Planet_

    @Pluto_Is_A_Planet_

    Жыл бұрын

    @@budderkupp1282 Exactly. They don’t even have to actually sexually assault their victims for it to still be sexually motivated. BTK never raped his victims (he thought that was somehow “taking it too far”) but his killings were for sexual reasons. He wanted to visually see his fantasies come to life, which is why he would then pose them & take photos, or would dress up & reenact his victims poses himself.

  • @budderkupp1282

    @budderkupp1282

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Pluto_Is_A_Planet_ You are right. Sometimes the killing alone is the sexual motivation.

  • @nobodysbaby5048

    @nobodysbaby5048

    Жыл бұрын

    @@budderkupp1282 There was a study awhile back that showed the human adrenal system can't tell the difference between the stimulus of imminent danger & sexual excitement. I wonder if this phenomenon is a variety of that response. i.e. they learn to trigger that response via murders & become addicted to the adrenal pop they get from it.

  • @cheryl9389
    @cheryl938910 ай бұрын

    Bundy was so casual and personable,not the kind of person you would think capable of these crimes yet the narcissism wasn't understood.

  • @annthomson5648

    @annthomson5648

    7 ай бұрын

    Or the extent of the abuse he recieved

  • @brianmeen2158

    @brianmeen2158

    7 ай бұрын

    Yeah to this day I still find Bundy to be fascinating. He was smart and good looking and was an expert at reading people. The problem is it’s very difficult if we can believe half of what he says . I bet he doesn’t even know why he killed those women or why the need was there in the first place

  • @yaboicaden200

    @yaboicaden200

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@annthomson5648he had to have been abused somehow. Or he just felt alienated and alone in some way, which was clearly the main reason for Jeffrey Dahmer's killings. And thats scary cause i feel alienated and alone every day myself, but i try to think most people do and one day ill have someone to love. Thats also the reason Ed Kemper killed, his lack of success with women and his bad relationship with his mom. But if he had an attractive girlfriend he very likely wouldnt have killed at all.

  • @JackTheSkunk

    @JackTheSkunk

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@annthomson5648 His childhood was weird for sure...taught to think of his grandfather as his father and his mother as his sister. I have read several books on watched dozens of videos on Bundy and not once did the subject of abuse come up.

  • @anneroy4560

    @anneroy4560

    6 ай бұрын

    I think it may be, in part growing up with mother as his sister (the shame of an illegitimate birth) & his grandparents as his parents ... then his mother married, moving away taking young Ted with her.@@JackTheSkunk

  • @FromPanictoParis
    @FromPanictoParis Жыл бұрын

    Mind hunter season 3 needs to happen

  • @STYLESBYLIFEBEAUTYNMORE

    @STYLESBYLIFEBEAUTYNMORE

    Жыл бұрын

    Facts no chaser

  • @thesmokingsection2056

    @thesmokingsection2056

    Жыл бұрын

    They canceled the show sadly

  • @daytonasayswhat9333

    @daytonasayswhat9333

    Жыл бұрын

    Left wing bs

  • @davidewaldt734

    @davidewaldt734

    Жыл бұрын

    I CONCUR!!!

  • @jsphillip60

    @jsphillip60

    Жыл бұрын

    Absolutely!

  • @johnwright291
    @johnwright291 Жыл бұрын

    Teds brother in law used to work for my families tugboat business. His sister was a very cool person. Ted has a younger brother who has videos on KZread. Understandably he has had a hard time dealing with the stain ted left on him. They were quite close and ted was so smooth that he fooled his family. His brother whose name I can't remember is just a few years younger than me. I'm 66. He was homeless about a year ago and I think there was a go fund me page to help him get an apartment. I think he is worthy of receiving help.

  • @angeliquepiafbordeaux4107

    @angeliquepiafbordeaux4107

    Жыл бұрын

    Theodore Bundy's brother's name is Richard Bundy.

  • @johnwright291

    @johnwright291

    Жыл бұрын

    @@angeliquepiafbordeaux4107 he comes across as a fine gentleman.

  • @paulvoorhies8821

    @paulvoorhies8821

    Жыл бұрын

    My 2nd cousin’s aunt’s travel agent was supposed to get his haircut by Jay Sebring the day after the Tate murders. He was so upset about being stood up until……He was so traumatized he never got a haircut again. Ever.

  • @brishawn8571

    @brishawn8571

    Жыл бұрын

    Na, fuck his brother

  • @chaz4471

    @chaz4471

    Жыл бұрын

    You are correct about teds brother being stained. Myself and my other siblings lost our identity in the shadows of our brothers crimes and it affected us into adulthood. We don’t have names, we had sentences. “Aren’t you (so-and-So’s) brother/sister? His crimes and reputation covered us like a blanket our whole lives. He is a certified psychopath and I wish the FBI would keep him in a cage like Hannibal lecture because he’s out of prison, again, and the next crime may be murder because he’s always away from it by inches. God help anyone he’s near!

  • @AdamOMcMurphy
    @AdamOMcMurphy Жыл бұрын

    It is eerie how engaging Ed Kemper is to listen to. You find yourself genuinely liking the guy even knowing the atrocities he committed. Easy to see how he gained the trust of so many victims.

  • @joerocha510

    @joerocha510

    Жыл бұрын

    That's the guise of a man who has done many crimes

  • @AdamOMcMurphy

    @AdamOMcMurphy

    Жыл бұрын

    @@joerocha510 Yeah, it's just spooky. Being someone who knows his story, and knows what he is capable of. Yet you kind of "like" him. Just makes one less confident in their "psycho radar".

  • @joerocha510

    @joerocha510

    Жыл бұрын

    @Adam Murphy yeah he comes off like your bro or best friend, not like a menace or psychotic buffaloe bill for character . He even was friends with the cops task on catching him.

  • @wolftone57

    @wolftone57

    11 ай бұрын

    Ed came off that way to police too. He used to drink with them in a bar opposite the Cop Shop. They called him Big Ed. John Douglas was talking about cooperation between police agencies in the USA. It has never become a reality. There are still many small town Sheriffs and city police agencies who refuse to submit crime figures to the National Database. They also refuse to cooperate with other agencies as happened with many murders only one county apart due to county rivalries

  • @paulbleasdale7783

    @paulbleasdale7783

    11 ай бұрын

    It is interesting how a seemingly amicable man would at some point find that inner rage to kill.

  • @terencehennegan1439
    @terencehennegan1439 Жыл бұрын

    56:20...The judge said he didn’t have any animosity toward him !... I wonder if he would have said that if one of his own would have been a victim. Just goes to show how charming the monster was. What a thing to say.

  • @cornflower9258

    @cornflower9258

    Жыл бұрын

    White privilege baby. You think he'd feel so mushy towards a black or brown criminal?

  • @bari2883

    @bari2883

    Жыл бұрын

    He’s doing his job correctly. In the eyes of the law he isn’t allowed any bias toward the defendant.

  • @garycostello4294

    @garycostello4294

    Жыл бұрын

    You have to remember Ted could have been a lawyer/politician and there would be many fellow sociopaths in those fields who could relate and sympathize with him

  • @terencehennegan1439

    @terencehennegan1439

    Жыл бұрын

    @@garycostello4294 Ted...Ted...Ted... you sound like your a friend of his.

  • @terencehennegan1439

    @terencehennegan1439

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bari2883 Again... would he have said what he said if one of Bundy’s victims was one of his kin !.. the answer is NO.

  • @MK-eu3qe
    @MK-eu3qe Жыл бұрын

    Why would that judge compliment Bundy? Tells him to "take care" after he murders how many women n a little girl l acting like he's his buddy who is sorry to see him go to prison

  • @allenomalley4014

    @allenomalley4014

    Жыл бұрын

    Hi I've never ever been able to understand that I think he should have been sacked... I thought if I was the parent of one of those girls listening to that flattery of a despicable disgusting piece of dross ... I would have punched him... unforgiveable

  • @ERIN478

    @ERIN478

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, that was such a bizarre and chilling moment. It was as if the judge couldn't have cared less about the horrific, perverted darkness that this guy visited upon these girls. Makes me wonder about his mental state.

  • @marciabarreto780

    @marciabarreto780

    Жыл бұрын

    I think he should have lost his job as a judge, it was an absurd thing to do.

  • @bobtaylor170

    @bobtaylor170

    Жыл бұрын

    None of you understands Southern men of that generation, especially, and traditional Southerners, in general. It's pretty well known that a Southerner can smile and say, "Well, bless your heart!" and what he or she is really saying is, "Go f*ck yourself." Southern people, older ones, anyway, had a tendency to become softer, gentler, more polite when confronted with hideous situations/people. Doesn't mean they wouldn't happily blow you away with a shotgun if necessary.

  • @MizzMetallikat76

    @MizzMetallikat76

    4 ай бұрын

    He also said that he woulda been honoured to have him as a professional lawyer in his courtroom if he hadn't been a murderer... The victim's families were at that trial, they were disgraceful comments for a judge to make! 🤬

  • @weedywendy4266
    @weedywendy4266 Жыл бұрын

    thanks for posting this. i haven’t seen most of the content. that poor dark haired mother..he life is ruined, she’s turned to substances to deal. heartbreaking.

  • @garybundy3831

    @garybundy3831

    10 ай бұрын

    😊

  • @paulvoorhies8821
    @paulvoorhies8821 Жыл бұрын

    There are motives. Usually sexual gratification and sadism.

  • @rjay7019
    @rjay7019 Жыл бұрын

    I grew up outside Salt Lake City and I was 13 when Ted Bundy was on his spree. My mom always followed True Crime stories. She was already overprotective but I looked so much like his victims that my mom practically had me on a leash😮

  • @yea9725

    @yea9725

    Жыл бұрын

    that's great your mom was protective of you because nowadays kids are just able to talk to any predator online without supervision from parents

  • @nobodysbaby5048

    @nobodysbaby5048

    Жыл бұрын

    And you're still here today, hurray for mom.

  • @doribells2290

    @doribells2290

    Жыл бұрын

    Giiiirrrl so glad you survived. Bless your Mother

  • @LINDACOSTA-fu7ku

    @LINDACOSTA-fu7ku

    4 күн бұрын

    WHAT A GREAT MOM👍

  • @rjay7019

    @rjay7019

    4 күн бұрын

    @@LINDACOSTA-fu7ku She sure was. I miss her every day 😪

  • @26michaeluk
    @26michaeluk Жыл бұрын

    That cop really said if those women had a tattoo they must be prostitutes or drug addicts.

  • @beckyisaac8692

    @beckyisaac8692

    Жыл бұрын

    I caught that too and thought hmm wouldn't be able to use tattoos to identify a certain type of person these days

  • @debratansey6074

    @debratansey6074

    Жыл бұрын

    I think at that time that was probably the case tattoo's have only become the norm in the last 10 years for women at least

  • @26michaeluk

    @26michaeluk

    Жыл бұрын

    @@debratansey6074 yeah I realize they were really taboo back then. I think you're right about 10 years ago it became a norm. I just don't like how he said it.

  • @nobodysbaby5048

    @nobodysbaby5048

    Жыл бұрын

    Things were different back then. Tattoos had a stigma associated w them.

  • @jickie511

    @jickie511

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes he really said that, it was 50 years ago. Women and tattoos weren't a thing back then

  • @HellhammerSS
    @HellhammerSS Жыл бұрын

    No motive???? WTF, how about for Pleasure.

  • @Toffanator

    @Toffanator

    Жыл бұрын

    No apparent motive at the time of body reclamation.

  • @selfesteem3447
    @selfesteem3447 Жыл бұрын

    Request for more like this. Psychopaths confessing letting us get into their minds. I love to learn about people like my father and it makes studying True Crime enlightening on a whole another level.

  • @RealWomenRealStories

    @RealWomenRealStories

    Жыл бұрын

    Soon! Thanks please subscribe and share!

  • @mrsbee5056

    @mrsbee5056

    Жыл бұрын

    Psychopaths telling the truth though? Thats a hard call

  • @mikeymoo1291

    @mikeymoo1291

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mrsbee5056 they don't tell the truth though. They say what you want to hear. As for getting into their minds...I doubt it. As someone once said. The closest you could ever get to Ted Bundy was if you were a witness in the back of his car while he was hitting some poor innocent teen 25 times in the face with a hammer.

  • @sharonletchford9375

    @sharonletchford9375

    Жыл бұрын

    You mentioned.yoirbfather? Why??

  • @GG-vv1zq

    @GG-vv1zq

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, why did you mention your father? Is he...? I am just trying to understand, but I mean no disrespect. Can you PLEASE tell us YOUR story?

  • @newyardleysinclair9960
    @newyardleysinclair9960 Жыл бұрын

    Kemper: I came in from the cold. There are some ppl out there who prefer the cold. What a great quote

  • @DeniseCoelhoEnglishForLife

    @DeniseCoelhoEnglishForLife

    Жыл бұрын

    I starting to think ut is not that Kemper and the like are particularly intelligent or easily liked It's mist people who are not intelligent enough and easily impressed, especially by the wrong things

  • @radiantpotato

    @radiantpotato

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@@DeniseCoelhoEnglishForLifeKemper was actually proven to be quite a few steps above the general population with regards to the traditional understanding of IQ. However, in the case of Bundy or Rader for example, I do agree with your argument. For people with anti-social PD, they need not be particularly more "intelligent" than average in order to succesfully manipulate and deliver information

  • @juorful
    @juorful Жыл бұрын

    Also...look into abuse. Most of these sick killers went through some kind of abuse. They need mental help.

  • @GenerationJonesi
    @GenerationJonesi Жыл бұрын

    I don't think serial killers are specifically a modern phenomenon. It's that we're getting better at catching them. There are serial killers documented in Rome in early 300/BC & in almost every country, up through history.

  • @melany.muraour
    @melany.muraour Жыл бұрын

    Wow. Seriously amazed at Ed Kemper interview. This guy could've been a great person. Pity life screwed him up like that. Mothers have the most essential roles on this planet. I wish all women would get to know how important they are. In fact, all parents. Moms and dads need to realise that they are entrusted with souls that need to be nurtured and loved.

  • @dougiedug

    @dougiedug

    Жыл бұрын

    well said ty

  • @jjkanefrsa81

    @jjkanefrsa81

    Жыл бұрын

    I agree he is fascinating and so intelligent

  • @laurastabell2489

    @laurastabell2489

    Жыл бұрын

    It was his brain. The connection between certain parts is cut off so he feels no connection to others. No remorse, no sympathy no empathy. People can have smaller degrees of brain damage and have psychopathic traits without being a full psychopath. Bullying is a manifestation of brain damage, irritability brought on by excess processing of differences through damaged ,scarred brain. It can be from processing a different look, a different idea, male /female etc...adaption to change. Its like the highway at rush hour- being closed down to one lane. True psychopaths have no emotion for others, they think they are superior due to that. You can see the duping smile sometimes. They use others to get revenge if you cross them. Gang tactics. Some people have misfortune, some people use misfortune. " My mother is bad and so I have all of these problems..." He is just using peoples emotions, their (stupid) sympathies all over again to draw people in. He is using an antisocial net to catch more flying monkeys to give him a degree of sympathy, maybe help him get what he can from them. In the outside world ,he could use the blame game to cause others harm or get his way. Anti socials focus on "me" ,Im the victim of...they gain your sympathy to get your help for them. Then they send you out to bash others that are different or allow you power and control over others, you can fix this problem by doing this... etc... There are several scenarios. Social motives focuses on others.We feel good when we help others because we are social. Watch who you help!

  • @hammondOT

    @hammondOT

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for remembering to include fathers, too.

  • @juanitarichards1074

    @juanitarichards1074

    Жыл бұрын

    Absent and or inadequate father play a role too, as do violent and or alcoholic fathers, and Kemper killed his grandparents for no reason, as he did his mothers best friend. Not to mention the innocent college girls.

  • @LoveHandle4890
    @LoveHandle4890 Жыл бұрын

    “It’s a lot scarier when there’s no motive.” -Billy Loomis (Scream).

  • @labrador-fx3fb

    @labrador-fx3fb

    Жыл бұрын

    My mom and dad are gonna be so mad at meeeeeeee

  • @cerebralcathedral3247
    @cerebralcathedral3247 Жыл бұрын

    A truly haunting documentary I haven't seen in decades. This is one of the best doc's on Ted Ive ever seen, and Ive seen a lot. I'm now a subscriber to your channel hoping for more quality documentary's on anything if this is your standard?

  • @loneprimate
    @loneprimate Жыл бұрын

    The summer of 1981 my buddy and I were downtown in Hamilton, Ontario to see The Fox and the Hound. We were 13. And while we were milling around waiting for the movie to start, a guy called us up to his his second story walk-up to help him move furniture. Promised us $5 each. We looked at each other, shrugged, and we went. Turned out the guy wanted us to help him move furniture, and we did, and he paid for the movie, essentially. But I can't help thinking now how lucky we were he was genuine, and how lucky he was he was making the request back then and not today.

  • @SaintMartins

    @SaintMartins

    Жыл бұрын

    Twist ending: Little did you know, Inside the furniture were severed body parts.

  • @jamessolomon4252
    @jamessolomon4252 Жыл бұрын

    Ted Bundy was the boogeyman. Forget Michael Myers, Jason or Freddy Kruger. He was anyone's nightmare.

  • @tracyshaffer4510

    @tracyshaffer4510

    Жыл бұрын

    He was extremely brutal with how he killed and mutated his victims.

  • @NPCHSN

    @NPCHSN

    Жыл бұрын

    Nope, just women’s nightmare.

  • @dokkanedtinkerbell5133

    @dokkanedtinkerbell5133

    Жыл бұрын

    Yea...he wouldn't do that to a man. He went for the defenseless.

  • @stevetrivago

    @stevetrivago

    Жыл бұрын

    Huh

  • @Basstroutfishing

    @Basstroutfishing

    Жыл бұрын

    He was not so tough, the cop he fought was visibly victorious and he went for sudden blunt force trauma, when they were bending down, asleep, or trapped in that car without handles. He was an anomaly because of his articulation abilities and escaping twice in the 70s. He was just sick and cowardly

  • @karenshadle365
    @karenshadle365 Жыл бұрын

    I was a teenager with long light brown hair, parted in the middle, during the Bundy time. I lived in Oregon, near Oregon State University, where 2 victims of his were abducted. Many of us young women then knew we fit his profile. It was a scary time and I know it affected me as these were some of my formative years. Grew cautious...

  • @goldenlass9488
    @goldenlass9488 Жыл бұрын

    Outstanding! Thank you for posting 👏🏻

  • @Redwhiteandtired
    @Redwhiteandtired Жыл бұрын

    Serial murders have dropped dramatically since this movie was made. Sure there are still some, but WAY less. There are several reasons for that, DNA advancements make it almost impossible to not leave evidence, there are cameras everywhere compared to back then, free and widely accessible pornography of alomst every kind that allows sexual perverts to have a release without needing a victim, and they finally took the lead out of the leaded gasoline and the lead paint that was making people way more agressive and irrational back then. Those, among other reasons (like cellphone data) have made it very hard for a person to get away with several murders over several years.

  • @rubberneckinc.8937

    @rubberneckinc.8937

    Жыл бұрын

    They are still out there. The FBI said they are just as prevalent as before it's just that the FBI isn't chasing them as before due to political reasons. The FBI said there are most likely 50 currently active.

  • @curiouslyme524

    @curiouslyme524

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@rubberneckinc.8937 Agree.

  • @marshapieroni6677

    @marshapieroni6677

    10 ай бұрын

    New technology certainly makes it more difficult to commit these atrocities without getting caught. We still have the deranged minds and idt more accessible porn takes place of urge to commit a murder

  • @pinklyon642

    @pinklyon642

    10 ай бұрын

    @@rubberneckinc.8937 WHAT? Political reasons???????

  • @rubberneckinc.8937

    @rubberneckinc.8937

    10 ай бұрын

    @@pinklyon642 the feds want the profilers to chase "terrorists" and not serial killers. Despite there training.

  • @Michelle_wald
    @Michelle_wald Жыл бұрын

    Good historical footage

  • @chosen_ones777

    @chosen_ones777

    Жыл бұрын

    Not to provoke but guess God is the one to follow and Jesus' way of following God is the one to mirror. But a thumbs up for your comment. And a thumbs down for mine. Peace, love and blessings from Denmark.

  • @lilymunster7132
    @lilymunster7132 Жыл бұрын

    Excellent documentary 🔍 Thanks for posting.

  • @EraldoPiccione

    @EraldoPiccione

    Жыл бұрын

    In fact

  • @susannebuchholz72
    @susannebuchholz72 Жыл бұрын

    Very interestic documentary! Thank you very much for uploading!👍🏻

  • @tashaderosier7424
    @tashaderosier7424 Жыл бұрын

    I LOVED this old crime doc! Thank you! 😊

  • @rachelgowans6853
    @rachelgowans6853 Жыл бұрын

    This was great, thanks! 👍

  • @seven471
    @seven471 Жыл бұрын

    "No motive" means you failed your job. It was either power, sexual deviancy, embarrassment for female rejection (he'd have sex with corpse...they couldnt reject him). There's a motive.

  • @ryansmurda1552
    @ryansmurda1552 Жыл бұрын

    OMG! Those poor family members of the victims. What a nightmare! I really don't know how they go on living after having that happen to their loved one. Its just horrible.

  • @catdooley4616
    @catdooley4616 Жыл бұрын

    I don't think serial killers just all of a sudden apeared. I think it was happening all along. If it were not for the press and the general public questioning and putting pressure on the police, they would have continued looking at them as individual cases and not related. So if these cops were like that, most probably had the same train of thought process through out the years prior to this realization.

  • @lauramounir3660
    @lauramounir36607 ай бұрын

    This video was before his time but when Richard Ramirez (night stalker) was finally caught, the way he looked scared the crap out of me. What he did to those women and how cunning he was, if demons walk the earth, he was definitely one.

  • @heatherhillman1
    @heatherhillman1 Жыл бұрын

    It's weird to watch a documentary on serial killers that is so old that they haven't yet caught Gary Ridgeway and BTK and Dahmer aren't even on their radar yet.

  • @msvirginia1799
    @msvirginia1799 Жыл бұрын

    Great video content. Thanks 4 a great upload. New sub 🖤

  • @SaintMartins
    @SaintMartins Жыл бұрын

    My Personal Top 10 1. Ted Bundy (Campus Killer) 2. Jeffery Dahmer (Cannibal Killer) 3. Dennis Rader (BTK Strangler) 4. Zodiac Killer 5. Richard Ramirez (Night Stalker) 6. Paul Bernardo + Karla Homolka (Ken & Barbie Killers) 7. Joseph James DeAngelo (Golden State Killer) 8. Gary Ridgway (Green River Killer) 9. David Berkowitz (Son Of Sam) 10. John Wayne Gacy (Killer Clown)

  • @fourshore502

    @fourshore502

    Жыл бұрын

    andrei chikatilo not on the list really?

  • @homespace1268

    @homespace1268

    10 ай бұрын

    Leonard Lake and Charles Ng...in California.

  • @dirtyfiles
    @dirtyfiles Жыл бұрын

    Being a very skillful manipulator, he dominated the minds of people for a long time that he was innocent. But his escape due to his desire to kill and adding new ones to his victims revealed his identity as a sadistic murderous serial killer in the eyes of the public.

  • @makhnovite
    @makhnovite Жыл бұрын

    Lol at the Henry Lee Lucas segment

  • @MIDGEx
    @MIDGEx Жыл бұрын

    Also, the cops interviewed were like “oh the victim had tattoos, so they were either a prostitute or on drugs” wowwww. 7:13

  • @jimmmount3287

    @jimmmount3287

    Жыл бұрын

    This bugged me too. What an asshole. Lots of women and people in general had ink even back then. It was the 80s not the 40s. He probably didn't solve a lot of cases with his outdated, dismissive ideas.

  • @peterenevoldsen7199

    @peterenevoldsen7199

    Жыл бұрын

    Tattoos used to be not normal among the general population.

  • @chrisfurius

    @chrisfurius

    Жыл бұрын

    Because it's true. How old are you? If you're not old enough to remember the early 80's with clear recollection, then that's why you're thinking 'wowww'.

  • @jickie511

    @jickie511

    Жыл бұрын

    The only acceptable tattoos you saw back then were retired military and biker gangs, women did not have tattoos. Different time era

  • @jimmmount3287

    @jimmmount3287

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jickie511 False. The 80s? I was there. It wasn't as common as today, but plenty of women had tattoos. My mother had tattoos in the 70s.

  • @heatherh.197
    @heatherh.197 Жыл бұрын

    I enjoy the vintage film footage

  • @lavariffmaster
    @lavariffmaster Жыл бұрын

    Wow, never saw that last segment on Kemper giving suggestions... Thanks!

  • @grider8344
    @grider8344 Жыл бұрын

    Kemper is likable. Cops are so stupid all the guns and he didn't take a closer look at his cupboard. Amazing🤔 Susan Rancourts Parents were so nice down to earth, they just had a beautiful daughter that was her mistake that was all there mistakes. Rip to all those girls. To all those parents I hope time has healed some of your pain.

  • @brishawn8571

    @brishawn8571

    Жыл бұрын

    Most ignorant comment i read

  • @AB-un4io

    @AB-un4io

    Жыл бұрын

    Ed Kemper was likable. He was especially intelligent and extremely well spoken. I always thought Ed would have been a successful, productive person had a few things gone differently. It’s an awful thing to be raised by narcissistic and abusive parents. I’m a firm believer in not giving these serial killers any catchy media names, any book deals…nothing. They should be effectively shunned. Because, even more than killing innocent people, these type of deviants must have ATTENTION. That’s a real currency for these monsters.

  • @teddyjackson1902
    @teddyjackson1902 Жыл бұрын

    I think we hit a point where communications tech, investigative tech, authority coordination, and population centers matured to the degree where it was more difficult for a serial killer to operate undetected. I don’t think they were a new phenomena that materialized from nothingness. Imagine a killer operating in the old west along the frontier.

  • @nobodysbaby5048

    @nobodysbaby5048

    Жыл бұрын

    They still do. Samuel Little was one of the most horrific stories ever.

  • @robquin1525
    @robquin1525 Жыл бұрын

    "What happens in the dark comes out in the light.". Trevor Phillips

  • @nobodysbaby5048

    @nobodysbaby5048

    Жыл бұрын

    The Bible says the same thing.

  • @TheMerryPup
    @TheMerryPup Жыл бұрын

    I like the PSA from Ed Kemper at the end. 👍

  • @jamescokl3
    @jamescokl3 Жыл бұрын

    Bundy used his real name at the boating lake. The judge was a fool for praising bundy.

  • @samanthalake5011

    @samanthalake5011

    Жыл бұрын

    Exactly

  • @kaynemccully5266
    @kaynemccully5266 Жыл бұрын

    Why so many serial killers in the 70s and 80s?

  • @robquin1525

    @robquin1525

    Жыл бұрын

    There were really awesome things and fun people and fun music and fun entertainment and people really had fun but just like everything else it always had a dark side and things were pretty dark in those decades.

  • @btstakescareofmewhenimsick4892

    @btstakescareofmewhenimsick4892

    Жыл бұрын

    Guess it was easier to get away with it. No cctv, no cellphones, no fast communication

  • @gqakathemagazine6111

    @gqakathemagazine6111

    Жыл бұрын

    They think it’s because fathers coming back from ww2 with emotional issues and bringing this into the home and or missing fathers. Also the new interstate highway allowed for killers to travel easily from place to place.

  • @scottrobinson9752

    @scottrobinson9752

    Жыл бұрын

    The 1950s was the last decade of the nation being a high trust society. Much of America still left doors unlocked and keys in cars. By the 60s, counter culture took hold... the nuclear family was beginning to be sold as a bad thing. In the 70s America began to enter into being a very low trust society. People were leaving sparcely populated close knit areas, for sprawling population centers. Women and girls ventured out into the world, on their own, more and more. Young women lived aIone more than ever before. Men and women mingled more as individuals, in social settings of unfamiliar people. The 80s were just an amplified extension of the 70s...with even lower trust in society. Also, the lack of technology allowed many serial killers of that time to go undetected for longer. The killer of those four college students in 2022, became a suspect because of the cell phone pings that they reviewed in that area. We have continued, over the decades, to become more and more of a low trust society . We are less social on an in person level (we have more of a virtual social life now). We live in more of a surveillance state. No matter what you do through the course of a given day...your meta data, and the amount of times you're likely on camera... has increased exponentially. As it gets more difficult for these type of people to engage in that sort of evil activity...they still endeavor to find new ways. This country has changed so much, demographically, in the last 20 years...killing has taken on more of an "us against them" sort of theme. Its more about masses of individuals, killing masses of individuals now.

  • @jimmmount3287

    @jimmmount3287

    Жыл бұрын

    It was a perfect storm. Jurisdictional blindness in law enforcement, lack of detection technology (cameras, databases), easier to travel, easier to be anonymous, no DNA, hitchhiking, rampant drugs & prostitution creating large victim pool, post-war breakdowns in nuclear family and violent or fear-based parenting. People didn't suspect "the normal guy" or actually believed "we're safe in our small town". Now we know better. I suspect psychopathic/sociopathic sexual sadists are still as common as they were then, but as parenting continues to trend toward gentler disciplinary methods than what was common in the past, they'll decline. Plus there's so much material available online (simulated and real) that a sexual sadist doesn't even need to risk committing a crime to get his rocks off. I think it's important to point out that all of this is just the US, though. I've seen a few docs on more recent (21st century) serial murderers in other countries (esp Russia it seems) that are getting away with it for all the reasons that affected the US in the 70s/80s

  • @jimmmount3287
    @jimmmount3287 Жыл бұрын

    This was cool, a serial killer doc back when it was more common than at any other point in US history. It was interesting to see how US law enforcement at the time were just wising up to the exploits that allowed these crimes to occur with the frequency that they did.

  • @georgecarberry9222

    @georgecarberry9222

    Жыл бұрын

    Absolutely correct. Sadly, all of the innocence is gone. Cynicism is the rule of the day. Psychopaths are predators period. Their motive is relief from the constant torture of voices in their heads & their sick & sickening urges. Their brains are formed differently. They don't need a motive beyond having a differently formed brain.

  • @jeffbrumby3442
    @jeffbrumby34428 ай бұрын

    I just read a book about Ridgeway, eerie to hear him mentioned here but not by name, he was over a decade from being captured

  • @bestrealredhed

    @bestrealredhed

    7 ай бұрын

    He was a very scary dude. Did the book discuss the reason he stopped killing years before he was arrested.

  • @jeffbrumby3442

    @jeffbrumby3442

    7 ай бұрын

    @@bestrealredhed Yes, he met a kind and gentle woman, fell in love and got happily married. He didn't actually stop, but he slowed down considerably. Previously his problem had been his inability to handle the women around him

  • @bestrealredhed

    @bestrealredhed

    7 ай бұрын

    @@jeffbrumby3442 thanks

  • @coolin2761
    @coolin276110 ай бұрын

    It’s very unnerving to listen Ed Kemper speak. Like he sounds so rational but he’s done some of the worst things you can think of.

  • @inkybluecompanionanimalres7795
    @inkybluecompanionanimalres77958 ай бұрын

    Love it. "He's no longer dangerous."

  • @bari2883
    @bari2883 Жыл бұрын

    Wrong. The Green River killer, Gary ridgway wasn’t intelligent and wasn’t baptising them by placing them in the river.

  • @amypember3729

    @amypember3729

    Жыл бұрын

    yes but he was cunning & devious

  • @btstakescareofmewhenimsick4892

    @btstakescareofmewhenimsick4892

    Жыл бұрын

    Well, that was one of their assumption while trying to draw a profile of him way before he got caught

  • @Erebus.666.
    @Erebus.666. Жыл бұрын

    Poor Ed K. He was broken by his mother. Where the blame lies is an impossible conundrum. You're now at peace Ed.

  • @msatxgault560

    @msatxgault560

    Жыл бұрын

    He isn't dead

  • @wolfe6220

    @wolfe6220

    Жыл бұрын

    Wow. He's still kicking, although will probably not last out the year.

  • @dannyagustin4446

    @dannyagustin4446

    Жыл бұрын

    Poor Ed? You couldn't see the excuses in his interview,it's all Deception, deceit,lies,his smooth talking is bait. The only true thing is his emotions towards his mother but he justifies killing her because He knew he was going to be captured so he on my mind killed her to avoid her from seeing him going to prison or potentially Killed.

  • @mindsigh4

    @mindsigh4

    Жыл бұрын

    i'm betting peace isn't directly on his menu until he gets his comeuppance for the scores yet to be settled on his karmic account.

  • @melissacole1821

    @melissacole1821

    Жыл бұрын

    He's literally a genius AND a sociopath. He used the same manipulation tactics to convince the parole board to give him an early release after the first time he was arrested for murder. He only turned himself in after killed his mother, because he knew he would get caught anyway.

  • @coffeecrimegal5968
    @coffeecrimegal5968 Жыл бұрын

    I haven’t seen this in years! And when I first watched this it was a re-run and they still hadn’t caught Gary Ridgeway aka The Green River Killer!

  • @James-cz5hf
    @James-cz5hf Жыл бұрын

    Prior to the 1950s, serial killers weren't getting caught as much. In fact, there may have been far more of them in the past.

  • @fourshore502

    @fourshore502

    Жыл бұрын

    yeah especially for rich people with the right connections.... the amount of horrors they must have got away with....

  • @originalkingalpha5116
    @originalkingalpha5116 Жыл бұрын

    📌 And to think that people trust dating sites and the plethora of social media platforms is utterly a behavioral risk to one's life. With today's happenings of atrocities, people will still disregard the simplistic element of common sense. Absolutely incredible.

  • @kenvelickoff4275
    @kenvelickoff4275 Жыл бұрын

    Edmund Kemper, doc is great insight, Autopsy shows on HBO also great

  • @highrollerdiscs805
    @highrollerdiscs805 Жыл бұрын

    love it

  • @johnfromdownunder.4339
    @johnfromdownunder.4339 Жыл бұрын

    Kemper is much more interesting than Bundy, Bundy bearly knew his owe impulses and why, Kemper understands exactly how it came to be.

  • @weedywendy4266

    @weedywendy4266

    Жыл бұрын

    totally agree. i feel dahmer was on the same level as kemper, as far as recognizing his sickness. bundy’s narcissism overpowers his ability to admit he is / was the bad guy.

  • @johnfromdownunder.4339

    @johnfromdownunder.4339

    Жыл бұрын

    @@weedywendy4266 I don't think darhmer understood how it manifested in himself, he got to the point he reduced it to god and the devil. He lacked insight, he knew he was sick how could he not with body's rotting in his flat. But if you listen to Kemper he can can fully understand how he became that way. And I wish he didn't go down that dark path because he could have done something good in life with that brain. Much more clever than any other murderer

  • @r-dot7010

    @r-dot7010

    Жыл бұрын

    Kempers IQ was higher than bundy's. Bundy was good at pretending to be smart (and he was on some level)..but Kemper really was. I kinda feel bad for Kemper because his childhood experiences steered him into becoming what he became. Bundy was just an impulsive pervert. He came from a good childhood (other than the claim of his granddad being his dad, which has never been proven).

  • @adamirishconundrum851

    @adamirishconundrum851

    Жыл бұрын

    Ed Kemper is a dumbass, high IQ doesn't make a person smart. All serial killers are stupid and take unnecessary risks that's why they almost all get caught.

  • @elizabethmcleod246

    @elizabethmcleod246

    Жыл бұрын

    Bundy was a manipulative coward.

  • @deborahtruthseeker112
    @deborahtruthseeker112 Жыл бұрын

    Crazy Judge has NO animosity against serial killer Ted Bundy!!! OMG!!!😮 All of society is in serious trouble with Judges like this.😢

  • @behindyou3689

    @behindyou3689

    7 ай бұрын

    “The best revenge against evil is not not become more like them” And having animosity doesn’t solve anything Also do you think your angry comment is changing anything I guess I’m doing the same but just let go and not care

  • @deborahtruthseeker112

    @deborahtruthseeker112

    7 ай бұрын

    @@behindyou3689 That is exactly the problem. People who do NOT care. This helps NOBODY. You are just like THEM.

  • @behindyou3689

    @behindyou3689

    6 ай бұрын

    @@deborahtruthseeker112 my point was is that he still ordered his execution without a wrath and vengeance You did not understand what I said It’s important to not be ruled by anger and vengeance I mean this in the most mature way possible but please try to not spread impulsive Information like this

  • @johnsnider2812
    @johnsnider2812 Жыл бұрын

    When an assailant is arrested, make sure he'll stay in prison for the rest of their lives, and that they'll NEVER be paroled!!!!!!

  • @maryfish8031
    @maryfish8031 Жыл бұрын

    Maybe because that is the only way for some guys to get famous. With all the crime dramas at least they can get their names in print eh?

  • @MsCppnpa
    @MsCppnpa Жыл бұрын

    Hi new subscriber here! Can I request for a documentary of John Wayne Gacy.? Thank you.

  • @ClassicRock1973
    @ClassicRock19739 ай бұрын

    Yes

  • @josephmoodie4970
    @josephmoodie4970 Жыл бұрын

    I thank all of the men and women in law enforcement for the hard work they do to catch and stop the monsters who want to eat our children and loved ones.Without them the world would be a much colder scarier darker place. I think Bob kepple passed away if I heard correctly but don’t morn him celebrate his life ,he did good things for his fellow man and his life work was to make his fellow man safe so thank god for him and others like him who keep fighting on our behalf and on behalf of our families ,he was a good decent man and the world could use more like him. Over the years I have grown to hate serial killers above all others or heartless murderers, who laugh in court. These kinds of people make me sick and I hate that I hate them so much because it’s a very deep hate which I wish was not there. Not because I want it to be so and only because I believe it should be done I believe the family’s of lost loved ones at the hands of a madman should be able to choose how killers are killed and there be no repercussions,it’s an awful thing murder is,in all cases . Every time I see the mother of Denise Naslund it’s heartbreaking to see her pain and for her and all others in her same position. The family’s should be able to decide a killer fate free to kill then in any way they want.

  • @kryptonarie6367
    @kryptonarie6367 Жыл бұрын

    There was something wrong with the Judge in Ted Bundy's trial telling him at 56:25, "You're a bright young man, you'd have made a good lawyer, I'd would've loved to have you practice in front of me, but you went a different way partner." Ted Bundy was suspected of violently murdering an untold number of women, and then the Judge having the gall to also say, "Take care of yourself, I don't have any animosity to ya, take care of yourself." No animosity? Just wow!

  • @behindyou3689

    @behindyou3689

    7 ай бұрын

    I mean he just sentenced him to death so what’s ur point?

  • @marksoquet8626
    @marksoquet8626 Жыл бұрын

    The tatoos indication is so outdated.

  • @susannebuchholz72

    @susannebuchholz72

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, you are right!

  • @noellegunning3301

    @noellegunning3301

    Жыл бұрын

    @@susannebuchholz72 agree, 1984 so very dated.

  • @joanclawford8964
    @joanclawford8964 Жыл бұрын

    Totally inappropriate comments from the judge to Bundy ... Wtf ...!

  • @ScarletKnight1111
    @ScarletKnight111111 ай бұрын

    Love you Marshall….everything will be fine ❤

  • @sciencefirst7880
    @sciencefirst7880 Жыл бұрын

    Never trust a man in a turtleneck.

  • @ScarletKnight1111
    @ScarletKnight111111 ай бұрын

    Love you Marshall ❤

  • @Chrisp_az

    @Chrisp_az

    11 ай бұрын

    He might not care lmao

  • @CovidConQuitTheCensorship
    @CovidConQuitTheCensorship Жыл бұрын

    Who would suspect a politician and a clown? They'd be the top of my suspect list 😅

  • @jenniferhaynes8625
    @jenniferhaynes86254 ай бұрын

    People talked about how nice looking he was,but I could see that something wasn't right about him.His motive was "insanity."

  • @almad4355
    @almad4355 Жыл бұрын

    What year is this documentary from?

  • @nilswestman4013

    @nilswestman4013

    Жыл бұрын

    1984

  • @noellegunning3301

    @noellegunning3301

    Жыл бұрын

    @@nilswestman4013 Yes, It looks fairly dated, the clothes. But it is informative and interesting none the less.

  • @elizabethwutzke9040
    @elizabethwutzke9040 Жыл бұрын

    Bundy became addicted to violent pornography and then said in an interview that it was what triggered his interest in reenacting, so to speak, what he wanted to experience in real life...what a shame.

  • @larakeller2478

    @larakeller2478

    Жыл бұрын

    Bundy's full of shit. He was a lying ass psychopath.

  • @aureliaa.4710

    @aureliaa.4710

    Жыл бұрын

    It started for him when he found a pile of roadside discarded violent porn magazines as a 11 yr old child (he asserts), *however* his aunt recalls waking up to him with a knife to her neck, grinning.

  • @karenshadle365

    @karenshadle365

    Жыл бұрын

    Elizabeth Wutzke When Bundy was talking, he was lying. You can't believe a thing he said.

  • @nomanejane5766

    @nomanejane5766

    Жыл бұрын

    Sweety he was just trying to stay his execution, it was all bullshit. He was a sadist

  • @savagesooner4891

    @savagesooner4891

    10 ай бұрын

    Nah, what triggered Bundy wasn’t violent pornography. It was violent sexual sadism…

  • @Kill--alllll---IDF
    @Kill--alllll---IDF Жыл бұрын

    46:44 that pint he had made his eyes straight 😂😂😂😂😂

  • @vanessadebrino7231
    @vanessadebrino7231 Жыл бұрын

    I always felt Bundy went back for a second victim at lake Samamish because he was able to abduct Janice Ott so smoothly he figured a second would go just as well. And it seems it did.

  • @Gazman67

    @Gazman67

    Жыл бұрын

    Maybe but had to be a complete idiot to use his own name and assume that he was basically invisible,when many people saw him and other women who didn't go with him remembered him.

  • @rogerrambo4172

    @rogerrambo4172

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Gazman67 not an idiot - just brazen. If you ask me Bundy wanted to be found. Not because of a desire to stop but because he wanted people to know what he had done

  • @paulvoorhies8821

    @paulvoorhies8821

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Gazman67. That was always the big head scratcher for me. I mean, really. WTF? Besides that, he was kind of a criminal mastermind, so what happened there?

  • @gqakathemagazine6111

    @gqakathemagazine6111

    Жыл бұрын

    @@paulvoorhies8821 he got cocky

  • @TheZodiacRipper

    @TheZodiacRipper

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Gazman67 Bobby Joe Long let one of his victims go and got arrested for it. After a while their egos are so inflated they think they can get away with anything and they usually dont care about consequences either.

  • @hadinapokalix7329
    @hadinapokalix73297 ай бұрын

    Is t it weird how Bundy was shy in highschool and didn’t talk much and after he started killing he was the biggest smooth talker😂😂

  • @deborahtruthseeker112
    @deborahtruthseeker112 Жыл бұрын

    Paroled to keep on killing. Absolutely NO justice, whatsoever.

  • @Fnelrbnef
    @Fnelrbnef Жыл бұрын

    The real Mindhunter.

  • @wenndann5708
    @wenndann570811 ай бұрын

    Especially Ed Kemper is not appearing any evil to me at all. I am not a psychologist, but he was obviously abused by his mother, after which he became obsessed with her and compared all women to her. She herself had probably some mental sickness and was very likely intimitated by his physical appearance, after a certain age. She was trying to fight him off, instead of loving him. All that Kemper was missing, is love. And after his Dad dropped him off at his own parents house, he was the loneliest person in the world, in his sight of the world, All just, due to women, because his stepmom at his fathers home was the one, who wanted to get rid of him. His grandmother then tried to prohibit normal things a young man really should do, by going out and that just was the breaking point. He was just betrayed over and over by women, I myself would most likely have been as angry as him, because of the betrayel these blood related women did to him, I feel this and I understand him at the point, when he killed his Grandmother. He was just very sensitive and did not know what to do. He then was moved in a mental institution for grown ups and I would argue, why? That should never been considered in any case. He was just a victim of his familiy, who abandoned him. But they did not see this. Dude, he must have been so sad inside. But in a grown up facility he was just trained to become emotionless. And that led to his crimes. But do not forget that authorities said he should not in any case get released to his mother, but he was. So the authorities are also responsible, because he may not would have done those murders. I really can not understand why he killed those girls, he may have killed them, because they were coeds, but the real motive can only be told by him. What I want to say, is, that he is no psychopath. Have mercy on him, even though, he did some terrible things. Ted Bundy was a psychopath, but not him. I am sorry for any grammatically errors or errors at all, I am a German.

  • @malcolmmarshall5946

    @malcolmmarshall5946

    11 ай бұрын

    I agree with what you say. Kemper is very different from the other killers. Your English is excellent btw.

  • @MIDGEx
    @MIDGEx Жыл бұрын

    You know it’s an old film when the narrator says he’s homosexual as if it’s important or relevant lol Just found that interesting 4:40

  • @Anna-ym5mh

    @Anna-ym5mh

    Жыл бұрын

    Actually it is..Did you hear his explanation ?

  • @ThunderDomeBoxingTalk

    @ThunderDomeBoxingTalk

    Жыл бұрын

    It is relevant 😂😂 how tf do you think it isn’t?

  • @Anna-ym5mh

    @Anna-ym5mh

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ThunderDomeBoxingTalk watched without understanding 😂

  • @ladonna-971

    @ladonna-971

    Жыл бұрын

    Well it us relevant when its sexuell motivated crimes. Explains why hw choose the victims on that level.

  • @bobbytrombley681
    @bobbytrombley68111 ай бұрын

    Listening to ed kemper talk, you’d never know!!!!!! Does anyone know what year this documentary came out??

  • @mick5330

    @mick5330

    11 ай бұрын

    The 90’s sometime. Probably early 90’s.

  • @balletshoes
    @balletshoes Жыл бұрын

    For some reason, the words of praise that the judge has for Bundy ring as an insult to his victims and their families. I do not think I could praise somebody I have just condemned to death by electrocution who has brutally murdered more than 30 girls for nothing but his sadistic pleasure.

  • @requiscatinpace7392
    @requiscatinpace7392 Жыл бұрын

    Those Seattle police finding bodies in the Green River should look at this guy called Gary Ridgeway, he’s a wrong un!

  • @spartacusoconnell3701
    @spartacusoconnell3701 Жыл бұрын

    Anyone know what's the movie at 37.35 dont think it's the deliberate stranger?

  • @xx7secondsxx
    @xx7secondsxx Жыл бұрын

    Otis Toole is suspected in John Walsh's son's criminal case (death) poor child

  • @loretta_3843
    @loretta_3843 Жыл бұрын

    The reasons behind so many of these crimes are the from the really ugly side of humanity that would make me have a breakdown if I had to work in this environment. There would be things you'd see that, in a way, make the officers involved, a type of victim due to the psychological trauma. At least it would to me. I hope that made some sense, just couldn't be succinct!

  • @Fran-px1oh
    @Fran-px1oh4 ай бұрын

    Must change interpretation of word, "Nice person."

  • @TaraConti
    @TaraConti Жыл бұрын

    They didn’t have these kinds of cases prior to the 1950’s? Call me a conspiracy theorist but it makes me wonder if any of these guys had any involvement with the MK Ultra projects. 🤔 I think it’s a fair question considering what is now known about the project.

  • @unowen9668

    @unowen9668

    Жыл бұрын

    They had them. Just not as publicized.

  • @keetahbrough
    @keetahbrough Жыл бұрын

    they are not motivated by something their victim does. they are motivated by something internal, that has been building and focused on since they were a child, and fulfilled when they were young. It only goes downhill, after the first kill. there might be things in common in terms of victimology, but that has to do with the killers personal favorite vices.. it has nothing to do with the victim. However, if ya'll believe that the human race always produced serial killers and mass murderers, we did not. We would NEVER have evolved as a life form, if we were as violent and primitive yesterday, as we are today. We are extinction level violent, fractured, deluded. Healing the wounds, that civilization and colonization of the planet has made and allowed to fester, is mankinds only redemption or bid for longevity.

  • @ScarletKnight1111
    @ScarletKnight1111 Жыл бұрын

    That’s fine 🕊

  • @Jay_Cannon
    @Jay_Cannon5 ай бұрын

    35:55 I don’t get how they say he was an “unlikely suspect.” The guy was a psycho, you can tell it by looking at his crazy expressions. A failure in school with visions of grandeur, a loner, grew up thinking his mom was his sister and his grandma was his mom. He’s a pretty likely suspect. Also where does this handsome thing come from? He looks like a total creep. He’s actually the guy I’d first suspect of something creepy.

  • @msatxgault560
    @msatxgault560 Жыл бұрын

    When was this produced?

  • @nilswestman4013

    @nilswestman4013

    Жыл бұрын

    1984

  • @cazpk6840
    @cazpk68404 ай бұрын

    He is the reason i do not like it when strangers talk to me.

  • @michaelbonade4667
    @michaelbonade4667 Жыл бұрын

    I watch Ted Bundy documentaries instead of the local news in NYC…..

  • @michaelbonade4667

    @michaelbonade4667

    Жыл бұрын

    Every night…over and over